No, you will still do fine. I don't always get a chance to consult them. I mainly use them if I am having a hard time with something or when I start to outline. The most important thing is to do the case assignments, take good class notes and do your own outline.

No, you will still do fine. I don't always get a chance to consult them. I mainly use them if I am having a hard time with something or when I start to outline. The most important thing is to do the case assignments, take good class notes and do your own outline.

I really haven't thought much about the outline yet. I doooon wanna.

I do have the advantage(?) that my crimes and tort class are being taught from study aids and opinions instead of casebooks.

Don't worry about doing outlines yet. I never start mine until they do a major shift in the material (that is, I do it then if I am being a good law student). Sometimes I get behind and don't do it until much later into the semester.

What kind of material do you have? You said study aids (I assume more like textbook material) and opinions? Do you mean actual cases, or just a summary of a case? Either way, it should not matter. Just follow the lead of the professor. After you get going, you will start to see what the professor is looking for.

When you use a hornbook or the examples and explanations type books, it is more of a textbook type overview. That will probably be the most familiar to you. It is the way most of us learned in college. They will have short excerpts from the cases, so you get the benefit of having the author explain most of it for you. All you have to do in reading that material is digest the material and figure out how a new set of facts would fall into place.

With the casebooks, that is a little harder. The court applies the law to a new set of facts, but often, you are left trying to decipher exactly what they said and how their analysis will apply to other cases. This method takes a little getting used to, but you will get it.

Research and writing is a whole new breed of learning. It is much different than what any writing class in undergrad went over. It is basically a whole new style of writing.